The Real Reason for Turkey's Shoot-down of the
Russian JetBy Gareth Porter
November 30, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "MEE"
- The United States and its NATO allies offered a ritual of
NATO unity after Turkish officials presented their case that the
shoot-down of a Russian jet occurred after two planes had penetrated
Turkish airspace.
The Turkish representative reportedly
played a recording of a series warning the Turkish F16 pilots had
issued to the Russian jets without a Russian response, and US and
other NATO member states endorsed Turkey’s right to defend its
airspace.
US Defense Department spokesman Colonel Steve
Warren
supported the Turkish claim that 10 warnings had been issued
over a period of five minutes. The Obama administration apparently
expressed less concern about whether Russian planes had actually
crossed into Turkish airspace. Col Warren
admitted that US officials have still yet to establish where the
Russian aircraft was located when a Turkish missile hit the plane.
Although the Obama administration is not about to
admit it, the data already available supports the Russian assertion
that the Turkish shoot-down was, as Russian President Vladimir Putin
asserted, an “ambush” that had been carefully prepared in advance.
The central Turkish claim that its F-16 pilots had
warned the two Russian aircraft 10 times during a period of five
minutes actually is the primary clue that Turkey was not telling the
truth about the shoot-down.
The Russian Su-24 “Fencer” jet fighter, which is
comparable to the US F111, is capable of a speed of
960 miles per hour at high altitude, but at low altitude its
cruising speed is around 870 mph, or about 13 miles per minute.
The navigator of the second plane
confirmed after his rescue that the Su-24s were flying at
cruising speed during the flight.
Close analysis of both the
Turkish and Russian images of the radar path of the Russian jets
indicates that the earliest point at which either of the Russian
planes was on a path that might have been interpreted as taking it
into Turkish airspace was roughly 16 miles from the Turkish border –
meaning that it was only a minute and 20 seconds away from the
border.
Furthermore
according to both versions of the flight path, five minutes before
the shoot-down the Russian planes would have been flying eastward -
away
from the Turkish border.
If the Turkish pilots actually began warning the
Russian jets five minutes before the shoot-down, therefore, they
were doing so long before the planes were even headed in the general
direction of the small projection of the Turkish border in Northern
Latakia province.
In order to carry out the strike, in fact, the
Turkish pilots would have had to be in the air already and prepared
to strike as soon as they knew the Russian aircraft were airborne.
The evidence from the Turkish authorities
themselves thus leaves little room for doubt that the
decision to shoot down the Russian jet was made before the Russian
jets even began their flight.
The motive for the strike was directly related to
the Turkish role in supporting the anti-Assad forces in the vicinity
of the border. In fact the Erdogan government made no effort to hide
its aim in the days before the strike. In a meeting with the Russian
ambassador on 20 November, the foreign minister accused the Russians
of “intensive bombing” of “civilian Turkmen villages” and
said there might be “serious consequences” unless the Russians
ended their operations immediately.
Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu
was even more explicit, declaring that Turkish security forces
“have been instructed to retaliate against any development that
would threaten Turkey’s border security". Davutoglu further said:
“If there is an attack that would lead to an intense influx of
refugees to Turkey, required measures would be taken both inside
Syria and Turkey.”
The Turkish threat to retaliate – not against
Russian penetration of its airspace but in response to very broadly
defined circumstances on the border – came amid the latest in a
series of battles between the Syrian government and religious
fighters. The area where the plane was shot down is populated by the
Turkmen minority. They have been far less important than foreign
fighters and other forces who have carried out a series of
offensives in the area since mid-2013 aimed at threatening President
Assad's main Alawite redoubt on the coast in Latakia province.
Charles Lister, the British specialist who was
visiting Latakia province frequently in 2013,
noted in an August 2013 interview, “Latakia, right up to the
very northern tip [i.e. in the Turkmen Mountain area], has been a
stronghold for foreign fighter-based groups for almost a year now.”
He also observed that, after Islamic State (IS) had emerged in the
north, al-Nusra Front and its allies in the area had “reached out”
to ISIL and that one of the groups fighting in Latakia had “become a
front group” for ISIL.
In March 2014 the religious rebels launched a
major offensive with heavy Turkish logistical support to capture the
Armenian town of Kessab on the Mediterranean coast of Latakia very
close to the Turkish border. An Istanbul newspaper, Bagcilar,
quoted a member of the Turkish parliament’s foreign affairs
committee as reporting testimony from villagers living near the
border that thousands of fighters had streamed across five different
border points in cars with Syrian plates to participate in the
offensive.
During that offensive, moreover, a Syrian jet
responding to the offensive against Kessab was
shot down by the Turkish air force in a remarkable parallel to
the downing of the Russian jet. Turkey claimed that the jet had
violated its airspace but made no pretence about having given any
prior warning. The purpose of trying to deter Syria from using its
airpower in defence of the town was obvious.
Now the battle in Latakia province has shifted to
the Bayirbucak area, where the Syrian air force and ground forces
have been
trying to cut the supply lines between villages controlled by
Nusra Front and its allies and the Turkish border for several
months. The key village in the Nusra Front area of control is Salma,
which has been in jihadist hands ever since 2012. The
intervention of the Russian Air Force in the battle has given a new
advantage to the Syrian army.
The Turkish shoot-down was thus in essence an
effort to dissuade the Russians from continuing their operations in
the area against al-Nusra Front and its allies, using not one but
two distinct pretexts: on one hand a very dubious charge of a
Russian border penetration for NATO allies, and on the other, a
charge of bombing Turkmen civilians for the Turkish domestic
audience.
The Obama administration’s reluctance to address
the specific issue of where the plane was shot down indicates that
it is well aware of that fact. But the administration is far too
committed to its policy of working with Turkey, Saudi Arabia and
Qatar to force regime change to reveal the truth about the
incident.
Obama’s response to the shoot-down blandly blamed
the problem on the Russian military being in part of Syria. “They
are operating very close to a Turkish border,” he declared, and if
the Russians would only focus solely on Daesh, “some of these
conflicts or potentials for mistakes or escalation are less likely
to occur.”
-Gareth
Porter is an independent
investigative journalist and winner of the 2012 Gellhorn Prize for
journalism. He is the author of the newly published Manufactured
Crisis: The Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare.